It’s possible that you know about some of these new Google apps, but chances are that you never saw them. It’s not too late to check them out. From virtual tourism around the earth to a way to make GIFs from data, Google has plenty up its sleeve.

While following the results of any election, you must have noticed how the percentage graph on the screen jostles between the two sides before settling on the final number. Now you can make that for any data.

Google’s Data GIF Maker is a fun way to show a data comparison between two things. A normal representation of the data would be a rectangular bar with each side’s percentage filled a certain color. The Data GIF Maker will land on that in the end, but it adds a little pizzaz to the whole thing. The two colors will fight with each other, go up and down a bit, and finally settle on the values you wanted.

Not everything on the internet has to be offer practical utility. Sometimes, the greatest use the internet can have is a reminder of how it connects you to so many people across the world.

Bubbles With Google is a social experiment. It’s about showing you how many people are on the same site as you, from across the world. Visit g.co/bubbles on your phone or desktop, and a ticker on the left shows new people joining in. Meanwhile, you keep hopping to new places lighting up on the map of the earth.

This isn’t going to be available for every news item on Google News. It would need to be a news event that has been fact-checked by a site like Snopes or Politifact. It’s a step in the right direction nonetheless.

Can robots make music? Google is trying to answer that with NSynth, a fascinating look into how music and sound can evolve with machines.

Here’s what’s happening. NSynth has “learnt” the sounds of 300,000 instruments. Normally, when you ask a computer to play a cello and a flute in the same note, it will play both instruments simultaneously. But if you ask NSynth to do that, it makes a hybrid sound of the cello and the flute. It’s creating a new type of sound!

You can fiddle around with all the different instruments that NSynth has learnt. There’s a basic piano for you to hit different notes. You can even adjust how much “sound” of each instrument is being used. So it’s not really NSynth creating the new sounds — it’s you.